British antiques/art dealer and diplomatic courier
Albert Henry Stopford
Born
(1860-05-16)16 May 1860
Died
10 February 1939(1939-02-10) (aged 78)
Nationality
British
Occupation(s)
Antiques/arts dealer, diplomatic courier
Albert Henry Stopford (16 May 1860 – 10 February 1939), known as Bertie Stopford, was a British antiques and art dealer specialising in Fabergé and Cartier and diplomatic courier; he was an intimate of the Romanovs. He rescued the jewels of Grand Duchess Vladimir the Elder during the Russian Revolution.
At some time Stopford offered the War Office his services as the eyes and ears in Petrograd.[7] From July 1915 till September 1917 he was staying in Grand Hotel Europe Saint Petersburg, Moscow and Tsarskoye Selo with unknown affairs. He went to the front with his friend Grand Duchess Vladimir, then to Tbilisi and Kiev. Three times he went back to England for a short period, maybe carrying letters. He was friendly with Serge Obolensky.[8] In April 1917 he visited the Grand Duchess in Kislovodsk, a spa in the Northern Caucasus.[9] In June he met with Felix Yusupov in Yalta. In July Yusupov showed him the Moika Palace and the spot where Rasputin was murdered. In August Stopford revisited the Grand Duchess and brought her money hidden in his shoes. She supplied him with the necessary information on how to access her jewellery in the Vladimir Palace.[10] Stopford travelled to Mogilev. He met with Lady Muriel Paget; Stopford complained there was nothing to eat in Saint Petersburg.
During August or September 1917,[11] together with Grand Duke Boris, Stopford was able to smuggle out some of Grand Duchess's significant jewellery collection from the Vladimir Palace.[12] At the end of September 1917 he left for England, via Sweden and Aberdeen, with a total of 244 items in two Gladstone bags. The Vladimir Tiara was inherited by Queen Elizabeth II directly from her grandmother, Queen Mary, in 1953.
Within months of his return to London he was embroiled in a homosexual scandal (caught in Hyde Park) and a trial at the Old Bailey. He served in Wormwood Scrubs in 1918/1919. It is probably there
Stopford wrote an autobiography, published anonymously in 1919 as The Russian Diary of an Englishman: Petrograd 1915–1917. Its entries detail the Imperial family, Russian politicians, the peace offered by Germany in December 1916,[13] the murder of Grigori Rasputin,[14] the official police report,[15] the February Revolution, and the Russian Provisional Government.